Watch Tracee Ellis Ross Get Ready for the 2018 Golden Globes, From Her Warpaint Red Lips to Her Bold Turban

A founding member of Time's Up, Tracee Ellis Ross took to the 2018 Golden Globes red carpet donning an all-black ensemble that felt equal parts chic, strong and unique. Her spiral onyx curls were swept up in a black satin Marc Jacobs headdress and her wide eyes were cast in thick charcoal liner with wings fit for Cleopatra. Ross's fresh face was freckled and glowing and her lips were vibrant in a matte rouge. After all, the revolution will wear red lipstick, was the mantra of last year's Women's March on Washington; and the revolution continues.

Last night found the legally-backed initiative, which Ross started with the likes of Reese Witherspoon, Shonda Rhimes and nearly 300 other prominent women in Hollywood to protect women who face sexual harassment across the workforce, in full effect. "I don’t think that we had any idea what to expect," Ross wrote in an email on Monday morning. "The sisterhood was palpable and the energy was encouraging, but most importantly the work and the message were amplified." Nearly every woman who took the stage nodded to the moment, ranging from quips towards the pay gap to direct verbal missiles on #MeToo, vowing to one day stop their peers from ever having to recite the phrase again. One of Ross's favorite moments? "When Natalie Portman introduced the best director category and in her deadpan mentioned that they were all men." she said.

And just in case words weren't enough, Globes attendees wore black in solidarity for sexual assault victims, many of whom were present last night. Some went makeup free or slicked hair back tight. Others found ways to incorporate metallic accents, a silver-lining, perhaps, for a soon-hopeful future. Ross, for her part, chose to stand out with a daring and pointed aesthetic, a no-nonsense look that showed off her sculpted arms and required little-to-no accessorizing, save a pair of pearl-drop Irene Neuwirth earrings, a warpaint pout and that sculpturesque turban. It was a ready-for-combat look furthered by the fact that underneath it all, she wore a pair of black jogging pants because, "as Meryl Streep said: 'There’s no going back now.'"